What Day is it Today? Round-up
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Thursday, March 18, 2010
Labels:
Islam,
Jane Jacobs
/
Comments: (0)
There are Women in Islam, there have always been Women in Islam. Ms. Magazine
Danger is afoot. Garden of Adam, Klu Klux Who? and Burn Her!. Ms Magazine
This would be a good time to point out Dark Age Ahead by Jane Jacobs. Don't forget to use and support your local Public Library.
So You Think You Know Womens History? Test yourself like its 1972. Ms. Magazine
Bioephemera alerts us to another WTF night on The National Geographic Channel. LOTR will never be the same again.
Who said the Victorian Era didn't have Women Artists? Part 1
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Friday, February 19, 2010
Labels:
Compton Pottery,
Mary Watts
/
Comments: (0)
Known for introducing celtic imagery and design into the Art Nouveau, specifically in shaping the celtic core inside Liberty & Co., Mary Seton Fraser Tytler Watts (1849-1938) was a genius of the Arts & Crafts Movement.
I was familiar with her ceramics and work for Liberty but had no idea the extent of the decoration that goes on inside the Watts Chapel in Compton, Surrey.
The Pelican Rug designed for Liberty & Co.
Watt Chapel, Compton
Detail Watt Chapel, Compton
I was familiar with her ceramics and work for Liberty but had no idea the extent of the decoration that goes on inside the Watts Chapel in Compton, Surrey.
Desperately seeking full-size pics for use as wallpapers. Someone please create hi-def versions!
*drool*
She also founded two Potteries which employed local artisans providing a wealth of employment for women who were otherwise bullied out of the workforce.
Compton Pottery Vessel
US National Statuary Hall Collection
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Labels:
1905,
Elizabet Ney,
Esther Hobart Morris,
Evelyn Raymond,
Florence Sabin,
Helen Keller,
Jeanette Rankin,
Joy Buba,
Maria Sanford,
Mother Joseph,
Sacagawea,
Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins,
Thocmentony
/
Comments: (1)
Frances Willard was the first woman to be added to the Statuary Hall Collection, today in 1905. So far, of the 102 sculptures added nine of them honor women, that's 6.86%.
1905
Frances Elizabeth Caroline Willard (1839-1898)
Educator, Suffragist, Author
Educator, Suffragist, Author
Marble by Franklin Simmons
1958
Maria Louise Sanford (1836-1920)
Educator, Activist and oddly Suffragist Resistor
Bronze by Evelyn Raymond (1908-Present)
Educator, Activist and oddly Suffragist Resistor
Bronze by Evelyn Raymond (1908-Present)
1959
Florence Rena Sabin (1871-1953)
Doctor
Bronze by Joy Buba (1904-1998)
Doctor
Bronze by Joy Buba (1904-1998)
1960
Esther Hobart Morris (1814-1902)
Activist, Suffragist, Politician
Bronze by Avard Fairbanks
Bronze by Avard Fairbanks
1980
Mother Joseph (Esther Pariseau 1823-1902)
Architect, Artist, Missionary
Bronze by Felix W. de Weldon
1985
Jeanette Pickering Rankin (1880-1973)
Suffragist, Activist, Pacifist, Politican
Bronze by Terry B. Weaver
Suffragist, Activist, Pacifist, Politican
Bronze by Terry B. Weaver
2003
Sacagawea (1788-1812/1884)
Icon
Bronze after Leonard Crunelle
Bronze after Leonard Crunelle
2005
Thocmentony (Sarah Winnemucca Hopkins 1841-1891)
Activist, Author
Bronze by Benjamin Victor
2009
Helen Keller (1880-1968)Activist, Suffragist, Author
Bronze by Edward Hlavka
Bronze by Edward Hlavka
There are slightly more artists represented that are female, twelve of the sculptures at 11.76%.
1876
Anne Whitney (1821-1915)
Bronze of Samuel Adams
Bronze of Samuel Adams
Image Courtesy of Architect of the Capitol
1889
Blanche Nevin (1838-1889)
Marble of John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg
1905 & 1905
Franzisca Bernadina Wilhelmina Elizabet Ney (1833-1907)
Marble statue of Sam Houston and Marble statue of Stephen F. Austin
Images Courtesy of Architect of the Capital
1905
Helen Farnsworth Mears (1872-1916)
Marble of Frances E. Willard (1839-1898)
1910
Nellie Verne Walker (1874-1973)
Bronze of James Harlan
Bronze of James Harlan
Image Courtesy of Architect of the Capital
1928 & 1931
Belle Marshall Kinney Scholz (1890-1959)
Belle Marshall Kinney Scholz (1890-1959)
Jointley executed the bronze statues of both Andrew Jackson and John Sevier with her husband Leopold F. Scholz
Images Courtesy of Architect of the Capital
1958
Leone Evelyn Raymond (1908-Present)
Bronze of Maria L. Sanford
1959
Joy Buba (1904-1998)
Bronze of Florence Rena Sabin (1871-1953)
1960
Yolande Jacobson Sheppard (1921-1998)
Bronze of Patrick Anthony McCarran
Image Courtesy of Architect of the Capital
1965
Suzanne Silvercruys
Bronze of Eusebio F. Kino
Image Courtesy of Architect of the Capital
Genderfrak Friday
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Friday, February 12, 2010
Labels:
Chris Pureka,
Clementine Ford,
fashion,
genderqueer,
Sigourney Weaver,
Vintage
/
Comments: (0)
Getting to an internet connection this week is proving to be difficult, I'm out of town and rural wi-fi only comes with a cable hookup. Here's a couple of random DQ pics inspired from Miriam's post over at Feministing.
Check out the promising new dapperQ , a genderqueer fashion site.
eBay find: photo taken c.1920-1924
Sigourney Weaver, looking damn fine.
Random hard-drive find, source unknown.
Musician Chris Pureka
And Clementine Ford, just 'cause, well, bring it!
Check out the promising new dapperQ , a genderqueer fashion site.
Tuesday Birthday Roundup
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Labels:
1854,
1874,
Aletta Jacobs,
Amy Lowell,
glbtq,
Missy Higgins,
poetry
/
Comments: (0)
American poet Amy Lowell was born today in 1874.Though expressibly not a "feminist" Lowell lived and wrote openly and became an activist through her unabashed impressionist poetry.
Apparently academics call that "highly coded" poetry. Isn't it thrilling to hear that was written and published with acclaim 91 years ago.
Around the Web:
Lowell, Amy @ GLBTQ
Nice selection of Poems by Amy Lowell
Books @ Project Gutenburg
That first line reminds me of Missy Higgins highly coded lyrics in her song Warm Whispers:
AND
Dutch doctor, activist, writer, lecture and suffragist Dr. Aletta Henrietta Jacobs is born today in 1854.
Read more at the Related Posts:
Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht
Image courtesy of the NYPL Digital Library
When you came, you were like red wine and honey,
And the taste of you burnt my mouth with its
sweetness.
Now you are like morning bread,
Smooth and pleasant.
I hardly taste you at all for I know your savour,
But I am completely nourished.
And the taste of you burnt my mouth with its
sweetness.
Now you are like morning bread,
Smooth and pleasant.
I hardly taste you at all for I know your savour,
But I am completely nourished.
~ Selection from A Decade, 1919
Apparently academics call that "highly coded" poetry. Isn't it thrilling to hear that was written and published with acclaim 91 years ago.
Around the Web:
Lowell, Amy @ GLBTQ
Nice selection of Poems by Amy Lowell
Books @ Project Gutenburg
That first line reminds me of Missy Higgins highly coded lyrics in her song Warm Whispers:
AND
Dutch doctor, activist, writer, lecture and suffragist Dr. Aletta Henrietta Jacobs is born today in 1854.
Painted by Isaac Israëls (1919). Present of Mathilde Cohen Tervaert-Israëls at the opening of the IAV in 1936. [Courtesy of Aletta Jacobs.org]
Read more at the Related Posts:
Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht
Martha Edna Wright Griffiths: Mother of the ERA
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Monday, February 8, 2010
Labels:
1964,
Martha Wright Griffiths,
Politics
/
Comments: (0)
Martha Edna Wright Griffiths (1912-2003) was, amongst many other actions, the first woman to serve on the powerful House Committee on Ways and Means and was instrumental in getting the prohibition of sex discrimination added to the landmark Civil Rights Act today in 1964.
Around the Web:
Martha Wright Griffiths (1912-2003) Women in Congress (also an excellent resource on Women in US Politics)
Griffiths Leadership Society for Women
Marth Wright Griffiths Bio and Documentation at the Legislative Branch Archives
Image courtesy of the Library of Congress
Original Image courtesy of The Centre for Legislative Archives
Principle not policy, Justice not favor. Men, their rights and nothing more. Women, their rights and nothing less...
Around the Web:
Martha Wright Griffiths (1912-2003) Women in Congress (also an excellent resource on Women in US Politics)
Griffiths Leadership Society for Women
Marth Wright Griffiths Bio and Documentation at the Legislative Branch Archives
Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Friday, February 5, 2010
Labels:
1894,
Aletta Jacobs,
birth control,
Dutch,
Suffrage
/
Comments: (0)
Following a succession of benchmarks, first female to take the pharmacist's assistant admission exam, first female to graduate from a Dutch University, first Dutch woman to become a medical doctor, it is without saying that Dr. Aletta H. Jacobs (1954-1929) met some obstacles on her path. Embracing the challenges that came with her passion she took an active interest in social injustice and helped revolutionize the world on many fronts.
Working for suffrage, womens health and workers rights she was a founding member of the Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht (Dutch Womens Suffrage Group) founded today in 1894, a founding member of the International Women Suffrage Alliance, a translator bringing International texts on human rights to Dutch readers, a pacifist participating in the first International Peace Conference, and a firm believer and advocate of birth control, opening the first birth control clinics and revolutionizing a little thing often called a diaphragm or "Dutch Cap".
Around the Web:
Dr. Aletta H. Jacobs (1854-1929) (Click the British flag in the footer for English translation.)
Aletta Jacobs (1854-1929)
Aletta Jacobs at Spartacus
At My Hero
The Gerristsen Collection of Aletta H. Jacobs (Supposedly one of the largest archives of Feminist Heritage. It is not accessible unless you are a subscribed paying academic member. Something I'm sure helps the cause. *sarcasm* It contains texts dating back to 1543!)
Working for suffrage, womens health and workers rights she was a founding member of the Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht (Dutch Womens Suffrage Group) founded today in 1894, a founding member of the International Women Suffrage Alliance, a translator bringing International texts on human rights to Dutch readers, a pacifist participating in the first International Peace Conference, and a firm believer and advocate of birth control, opening the first birth control clinics and revolutionizing a little thing often called a diaphragm or "Dutch Cap".
Does anyone know what device is in the picture below?
Around the Web:
Dr. Aletta H. Jacobs (1854-1929) (Click the British flag in the footer for English translation.)
Aletta Jacobs (1854-1929)
Aletta Jacobs at Spartacus
At My Hero
The Gerristsen Collection of Aletta H. Jacobs (Supposedly one of the largest archives of Feminist Heritage. It is not accessible unless you are a subscribed paying academic member. Something I'm sure helps the cause. *sarcasm* It contains texts dating back to 1543!)
Gertrude Stein: Outlaw and Classic
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Thursday, February 4, 2010
/
Comments: (0)
Good Lords, it was Gertrude Steins (1874-1946) birthday yesterday. She's been the same age for a while now.
Gertrude Stein (left) and her companion, Alice B. Toklas, in Bilignin, France, 1938. (Cecil Beaton/From "Gertrude Stein: In Words and Pictures")
Around the Web:
Unstoppable
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Labels:
1965,
Art,
Geraldine McCullough
/
Comments: (0)
Not being invited to the strict invite-only George D. Widener Sculpture Competition, today in 1965, didn't stop Geraldine McCullough (1922-2008). Not only did she manage to get her two-hundred and fifty pound sculpture, titled Phoenix, into the event but she took home the Gold Metal!
Around the Web:
Geraldine McCullough at Essie Green Galleries
Geraldine McCullough (1922 - 2008) at Woman Made
Geralding McCullough: Painter Scluptor Exhibit Notes at Parish Gallery, Georgetown
Excellent Slideshow at EbonyJet.com
Renaissance Woman
Posted by
The Timeline Project
on Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Labels:
1583,
Anna Roemers Visscher
/
Comments: (0)
Once hailed as the 'second Sappho' and 'Fourth Muse', the Poet, Translator, and Artist Anna Roemers Visscher (1584-1651) was born today in 1583. She was a member of the 17th Century artist's group self-named The Muiden Circle. Her writings and correspondence have helped greatly in providing a more realistic portrayal of the post-medieval world and challenge the notion that 'The Renaissance' was a great masculine event in which women played no active part.
For someone so highly praised it is disappointing not to be able to find any English translations of her work around the web and to only find one fragment in her native Dutch. Only a handful of her fine glass engraving are known, most in the Rijksmuseum.
Much *sigh*.
Around the Web:
Anna Roemers Visscher Collection at the Rijksmuseum
Anna Visscher at Wikipedia
For someone so highly praised it is disappointing not to be able to find any English translations of her work around the web and to only find one fragment in her native
Much *sigh*.
Around the Web:
Anna Roemers Visscher Collection at the Rijksmuseum
Anna Visscher at Wikipedia
Friday Fun - Now in Stereo!
Words aren't always the easiest for my brain so, on day's such as today, random pictures must do. Yes, Grammatics are also an issue, as are tenses and making up words that don't exist. Best just to have fun.
Unfortunately to see media in stereo we need four-eyes.
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